Exterior
A large 2½-storey farmhouse in 2 distinct phases. The earlier late C16 block on the L (S) side (formerly listed as the ''''granary''''), is of rubble stone (painted white in the front elevation) with a steeply pitched graded stone-tile roof, octagonal stone stack to the R and more complex polygonal stack to the L. The later C17 block to the R (N), is lower, and has roughcast walls with steep slate roof. It has ridge stacks to the centre and R end, and a tall tapering stone stack, heightened in brick, rising from the eaves on the L side. A C17 2-storey porch is centrally placed in the front elevation between the 2 blocks.
The porch has a segmental-headed doorway and replaced door, above which is a 4-pane pivoting window. (A former recess above the doorway, at one time containing a tablet with a coat of arms, is not now visible in the roughcast.) The hipped roof is on a plain corbel table. Set back to the R of the porch are margin-lit 2-pane sash windows in each storey. The remainder of the elevation is brought forward, with the tall eaves stack in the angle. It has 2-pane margin-lit sash windows to the L of centre in both storeys, a ribbed door lower R, and 2-pane sash above it at an intermediate level. The R gable end is asymmetrical and has 2 attic windows, of which the R-hand is blocked built retains a drip mould, while the L-hand is a fixed light under a wooden lintel. Below is an attached farm building. The rear of the C17 block has an outshut added on to an original stair projection, of which a small narrow light remains visible in the side wall.
The C16 block is set back from the later porch. In its lower storey is a wide inserted segmental-headed doorway with double C19 boarded doors, and a boarded door then an inserted window to the R. To the L side is a small ventilation strip, the only original opening in the lower storey. The upper storey is dominated by its pair of 4-light windows with wooden ovolo mullions, drip moulds and relieving arches. Both were originally transomed windows, of which the L-hand has survived virtually intact, while in the R-hand window only the upper lights and transom survive, below which a doorway has been inserted into the position of the lower lights, to allow direct access to the first floor, probably for farm workers'''' accommodation. On the R side is another relieving arch over a blocked window, into which a smaller window has been inserted, while on the L side a corresponding window is also blocked but retains a hood mould. The L gable end has the shadow of a lower 2-storey former wing, which has pigeon holes in the wall. The rear is dominated by the great-chamber stack L of centre, rising from a gable above the eaves, and with an octagonal shaft. In the lower storey is a wide blocked opening R of centre under a segmental head with voussoirs, into which a smaller window has been inserted. To the R end is a small ventilation strip to a recess beside the kitchen fireplace. On the L side is a shuttered window under a drip mould, and a boarded door is at the L end to the cross passage of the C17 block. On the L side there is a narrow opening lighting the stair at intermediate level, with an inserted stair window to its L. Above is a further stair window, under a drip mould and relieving arch for a wider original window. The upper storey also has a segmental relieving arch indicating the position of an original window to the great chamber, but replaced by a narrower and lower-placed 2-light window with shutters. On the R side are putlogs.
In front of the C17 block is a rubble-stone garden wall, probably of the C17.